Leviticus 25:23-28
God owns the land and provides a way for what is lost to be restored.
Scripture Text
25:23 “ ‘The land shall not be sold in perpetuity, for the land is mine; for You are strangers and live as foreigners with me.
25:24 In all the land of Your possession You shall grant a redemption for the land.
25:25 “ ‘If Your brother becomes poor, and sells some of His possessions, then His kinsman who is next to Him shall come, and redeem that which His brother has sold.
25:26 If a man has no one to redeem it, and He becomes prosperous and finds sufficient means to redeem it,
25:27 Then let Him reckon the years since its sale, and restore the surplus to the man to whom He sold it; and He shall return to His property.
25:28 But if He isn’t able to get it back for Himself, then what He has sold shall remain in the hand of Him who has bought it until the Year of Jubilee. In the Jubilee it shall be released, and He shall return to His property.
God owns the land and provides a way for what is lost to be restored.
Leviticus 25:23-28 teaches that land cannot be permanently alienated because it belongs to the Lord, and therefore provisions are established for redemption to preserve covenant inheritance.
God's people must reject exploitative ownership, restless productivity, poverty profiteering, permanent bondage, and hopelessness, while embracing Christ as the Redeemer who brings true liberty and inheritance.
- Land Sabbath The land must rest every seventh year as a Sabbath to the Lord.
- Jubilee proclamation After seven Sabbath cycles, liberty is proclaimed in the fiftieth year.
- Economic justice under Jubilee Land transactions must be calculated by harvest years remaining and must not exploit.
- Provision promise The Lord promises security and abundance when Israel obeys Sabbath-year rhythms.
- Theological land principle The land belongs to the Lord, so permanent sale is forbidden and redemption is required.
- Property redemption laws Family land, city houses, village houses, and Levitical property are regulated according to redemption and Jubilee.
- Poverty protection and no interest Poor Israelites must be supported without exploitative interest.
- Israelite servitude Poor Israelites who sell themselves are treated as hired workers and released in Jubilee.
- Foreign slaves and Israelite protection The chapter distinguishes foreign slave acquisition from the treatment of fellow Israelites.
- Redemption from foreign masters Israelites sold to foreigners retain redemption rights and are released in Jubilee.
The Lord speaks to Moses at Mount Sinai and commands that the land itself must observe a Sabbath to the Lord every seventh year. After seven Sabbath years, the fiftieth year is consecrated as Jubilee, announced with the trumpet on the Day of Atonement. Property is returned, liberty is proclaimed, and economic transactions are governed by the number of harvest years remaining until Jubilee. The chapter then provides laws for trusting the Lord's provision during the Sabbath year, redeeming land, selling houses, protecting Levitical towns, helping poor Israelites, prohibiting interest exploitation, regulating Israelite servitude, and redeeming Israelites sold to resident foreigners. The chapter closes by grounding everything in the exodus: Israelites belong to the Lord as His servants.
Leviticus 25 teaches that holiness reaches into land economics and social structures. The land must rest because it belongs to the Lord. Family inheritance must be restored because Israel's land tenure is covenant stewardship, not absolute ownership. The poor must be supported because the Lord redeemed Israel from Egypt. Interest exploitation is forbidden because poverty must not become opportunity for gain. Israelites must not be enslaved permanently because they are already the Lord's servants. Jubilee proclaims that Israel's economic life must periodically reset around divine ownership, redemption, mercy, and release.
Theological logic
- The LORD speaks at Mount Sinai, tying these land laws to covenant revelation.
- The land Israel enters is the LORD's gift and must keep Sabbath to Him.
- Six years of work are followed by a seventh year of land rest.
- The Sabbath year disrupts productivity idolatry and teaches reliance on what the LORD provides.
- After seven Sabbath-year cycles, the fiftieth year is consecrated as Jubilee.
- The trumpet of Jubilee is sounded on the Day of Atonement, linking release to atonement and covenant restoration.
- Jubilee proclaims liberty throughout the land and returns people to family property.
- Land purchases are really purchases of harvest years until Jubilee, not permanent alienation of inheritance.
- Economic dealings must fear God and avoid taking advantage of one another.
- Israel's anxiety about food during Sabbath years is answered by the LORD's promise of sixth-year abundance.
- The land must not be sold permanently because the land belongs to the LORD.
- Israel are foreigners and temporary residents with the LORD, even in their own inheritance.
- Redemption rights protect family inheritance when poverty forces sale.
- City houses, village houses, and Levitical property receive distinct rules because not all property functions the same way in Israel's covenant economy.
- The poor must be strengthened so they can live among the people.
- Interest and profit from a poor brother are forbidden because poverty must not be exploited.
- Israelites who sell themselves must not be treated as slaves because the LORD brought them out of Egypt.
- Jubilee releases Israelite servants and restores them to family and inheritance.
- Foreign slaves are treated differently in the Old Covenant social order, but ruthless rule over fellow Israelites is forbidden.
- Israelites sold to foreigners retain redemption rights through kinship and Jubilee.
- The chapter closes with the decisive identity claim: the Israelites are the LORD's servants whom He brought out of Egypt.
- Do not treat land ownership as absolute rather than stewarded under God.
- Do not ignore the covenant structure preserving family inheritance.
- Do not reduce redemption to financial transaction without theological meaning.
- Do not assume permanent loss within God’s covenant system.
- Do not detach this passage from the Jubilee framework.
- Do not overlook the role of the kinsman-redeemer.
- Do not interpret these laws as merely economic rather than theological.
- Do not assume human control overrides God’s authority over land.
- Do not detach the land-redemption law from Israel’s promised-land inheritance under the Sinai covenant.
- Do not turn the passage into a generic statement against all land sales; it regulates Israel’s inherited land in relation to Jubilee.
- Do not reduce redemption to a metaphor; in this passage it has concrete legal and economic function.
- Do not erase the distinction between divine ownership and human stewardship; Israel may possess and use land but may not treat it as absolutely theirs.
- Do not apply the law directly to modern property systems without first honoring its covenant, kinship, and land-allotment setting.
- God’s ownership relativizes every human claim of possession.
- Economic arrangements must not erase covenant identity, family inheritance, or neighborly mercy.
- Redemption is not sentiment; it is costly action for restoration.
- God’s people must treat property as stewardship under the Lord, not as ultimate security.
- Jubilee teaches that God’s order protects against permanent despair after loss.
- Rest in the Lord's provision rather than idolizing productivity.
- Treat possessions as stewardship.
- Refuse to exploit another person's poverty.
- Strengthen the poor so they can live among God's people.
- Practice fair dealing in buying, selling, lending, and hiring.
- Build release and restoration into community life.
- Remember that redeemed people belong to the Lord.
- Proclaim Christ as the true Redeemer and Jubilee.
Trust, mercy, generosity, justice, restraint, stewardship, humility, hope, and reverence for the Lord's ownership.
- Sabbath year foundation : Exodus 23 gives an earlier command for the land to rest in the seventh year for the poor and animals.
- Sabbath and creation : The land Sabbath extends the creation Sabbath principle into Israel's agricultural life.
- Sabbath and exodus : Deuteronomy grounds Sabbath in exodus redemption, which also grounds Leviticus 25's servant laws.
- Debt release : Deuteronomy 15 develops release and generosity commands that resonate with Leviticus 25.
- Kinsman redemption in Ruth : Boaz's redemption of family land and Ruth's family line reflects the redemption logic of Leviticus 25.
- Land redemption hope : Jeremiah's land purchase during impending exile depends on the hope that houses, fields, and vineyards will again be bought.
- Land Sabbaths and exile : Chronicles interprets the exile as the land enjoying its Sabbath rests.
- Nehemiah and economic exploitation : Nehemiah rebukes interest, debt oppression, and enslavement among returned Jews.
- Isaiah's Jubilee-like proclamation : Isaiah announces good news to the poor, liberty to captives, and the year of the Lord's favor.
- Jesus announces fulfillment : Jesus reads Isaiah 61 and declares its fulfillment in His ministry.
- Redemption by blood : The New Testament presents Christ's blood as the redemption price for His people.
- Sabbath rest in Christ : Hebrews develops the theme of Sabbath rest for God's people.
This passage shows that God retains ultimate ownership and provides a means of redemption for what is lost.